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tv   ABC World News Now  ABC  July 20, 2011 2:05am-4:00am PDT

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oprah: daun is the one that got away. melissa and daun have talked on the phone since last year but have never met in person until today. come out, daun. welcome to you. [applause] >> oh, i'm so glad you're ok. oprah: so, daun, i'm sure that triggered a lot for you. >> yeah. i knew that we were two women who had suffered an
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enormous amount of pain from the same man. and there was a level of understanding that only she would have for the situation, and i reached out to her. oprah: mm-hmm. and you all have been talking ever since? >> yeah. oprah: why do you think he let you get away? >> the baby maybe. the screaming from the floorboard. another-- oprah: because he would have had to kill you and the baby? >> he would have had to kill me and the baby. >> spoiled the fantasy. oprah: yeah, spoil the fantasy? >> spoiled his fantasy. the noise from the baby spoiled the fantasy, so-- oprah: hmm. >> you know, and i think it's--you know, something that you said that i just have to talk about. and i've said--you don't know how many of these are out there. i mean, there could be 50 more of these. and i don't know why you got in that car or where you were going, but you don't ever want to do that. i mean, i want to use your story to say that to every woman in america. don't--obviously, don get get in a stranger's car. and do not go to a second location. 'cause there's only one reason they want to take you away and isolate you even more. it's very dangerous. >> well, he seemed like a very
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respectable person. he--we were talking in the parking lot, and he had mentioned coming down from washington and having a birthday party with his child. there was no intimidation there for me. of course, i was leery at the point when i got into the car. >> nobody's respectable enough to get in the car with and drive away. oprah: yeah. and this is what everybody needs to know. sociopaths are respectable. that's what they do. that's the whole idea. >> they're so smooth. they--and that's what makes them effective. oprah: yeah, that's right. did your father ever tell you about daun, the one that got away? >> he did. i--i was just a young-- oprah: he did? >> he did. i was really young. i heard the name. i didn't hear what happened, the event that daun just described. i heard her name. and so when i first got her e-mail, i was like, "it's daun. it's true. she exists." oprah: when you heard that he had been arrested and, you know, later convicted, did you know immediately that's the man? >> i was contacted by a detective in blythe, california.
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they were actually trying to solve a case. they had a jane doe there. and so the detective was asking me a lot of questions about victims that he had attacked after me, which i didn't have any information--because he went almost a year and a half after my attack before he went on to kill again. there were some legal proceedings he went through on my end, which i think sat him down for a little while and made him think about the perfect victim to take from then on out--women he thought no one would miss. he was pretty much in the evolution stage when i met him. and thank god-- oprah: because you were the second one, he says. >> yes. oprah: second one, he says. dr. phil, what do we learn from all of this? >> well, you know, a final thought is, you can't be in denial. i mean, if your instinct tells you something's wrong, it's probably wrong. oprah: that's why you have it. >> exactly. at 10 years old, you had instincts telling you something is wrong here, and you were so right. you've got to trust that intuition. oprah: yes, but i just want to ask you this, daun. did you ever get in another car with a
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stranger after that? >> no. oprah: yeah. learned your lesson well. >> yeah. oprah: thank you. thank you, daun. thank you, rose. and thank you, melissa. melissa's bo called "shat called "shattered silence, the untold story of a serial killer's daughter." it's in stores now. and, dude, thank you. >> well-- oprah: see you on "the dr. phil show." >> thanks for having me back. see you in 7 years. oprah: see you in 7 years? [applause] [applause] [captioning made possible by king world] [captioned by the national captioning institute --www.w.w.ap.org--] g about it. reagan's been golfing since she was 2 years old. now that she's aced a hole in one she says her next goal is to beat her dad.
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she seems to be well on her way. that young already? >> that's my kind of golf. i got a hole in one, nobody saw it but i got it. >> i would want some proof, yeah. >> she has a great swing though. >> do you play? >> i'm horrible but i try. >> i just drive the cart. we'll be back with more "world news now" after this.
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well, the baby boomers are at it again. they've been shaking things up for decades. why change now as they enter retirement? >> exactly. the latest institution getting a boomer makeover is marriage. as abc's claire shipman reports more boomer retirees choose to be together but apart.
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>> reporter: side by side through life, hand in hand growing older. that was supposed to be the best thing about retirement. right? think again. meet the chatfields. jane chatfield thrives on the rich bustle of city life. >> i love i suppose first of all being around young people. all those young ponytails bobbing up and down as they stay in shape. the rowers on the river. that's gorgeous. >> reporter: shehend her husband john spent most of their marriage a team. upon retirement, they looked toward maine, his favorite haunt. >> we had the first conversations about retirement to maine sometime before we were married. >> reporter: a funny thing happened on the way to a full-time existence there. he loved it, she didn't, especially the winters. jane decided to make cambridge, massachusetts, her winter home. >> there are times when i miss her very, very much. >> do you think your relationship has grown stronger because of this arrangement? >> i think i've been less wimpy.
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i realize the time we're together, i can be more articulate about what i really need or want or would like. and i think you respect me more because of that. >> well, it's certainly true. >> i can beat you up. >> it's a different generation of women that want to have a voice. it's no longer just adjusting to the husband's retirement. i think we're going to see more living together but apart. >> reporter: and the chatfields aren't alone. while jim is at home pursuing his passions -- working at a museum or biking -- susan's in honduras, volunteering for months at a time. or living in san antonio, helping g derprivileged kids. the lesson? >> if your spouse is truly happy and content in their heart, your relationship is extremely strong. >> reporter: the rosses celebrated their 31st wedding anniversary this week. maybe this sort of separation is going to be good for marriage vows. that could(bd good news because
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one-third of boomers say they can't agree on where they want to retire. but an even bigger percentage say they can't agree on a financial plan. next in our series, money. claire shipman, abc news, washington. >> boy. money's the big one. >> always. >> that's the main cause of divorces, financial arguments, couples can't agree on a budget, that sort of thing. >> that's like the idea you've been married awhile, you still are individual enough to say, i like to do my summers here, i like to do my thing over here. we're still together but we're separate peoplpl think that's an important lesson. >> i can see how that would work for some couples but not other couples like if you have twins. >> oh! i look like grady from "sanford and son," you look like sophia from "the golden girls." >> turns out i do not age well. >> oh, man. i love our graphics. that was good. >> all right. >> bea arthur.
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she divorced tiger woods, dated somebody new, and discovered quite a surprise. can this girl catch a break? a very well known former anchor of this show is putting some extra skin in today's "skinny." stay with us.rlrlrlrlrlrlrlrlrll
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♪ skinny so skinny sounding good there. >> thank you, thank you. >> time for "the skinny" on this wednesday morning. we're starting out with a little bit of elin nordegren news. tiger woods' ex, gorgeous ex. >> elin, yes. >> she was totally blind-sided by the tiger woods scandal. turns out she's dating her new boyfriend, jamie dingman, he's been around the block a time or two. well, see there on the screen. that's rachel uchitel, one of the alleged tiger woods mistresses. apparently her payout from tiger was 10 million bucks. we know from some real estate news here in new york she got like a $3 million apartment on
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park avenue. apparently there was some sort of payout. turns out this new boyfriend, jamie dingman, had a fling with rachel uchitel that elin is just finding out about. and so she's sort of wondering if this guy's yet another tiger. >> rachel, she stays busy. she's in the scene, let's put it that way. >> she's definitely in the scene. we were sort of listing all the people she's been hooked up with that we've heard about and the list was long. yeah. >> she can't catch a break. tiger, then this guy. >> i know. heard much from her.we haven't she's been doing a good job of keeping a low profile. >> for the kids and that's good. >> yeah. >> you may remember former anchor of "world news now," the one and only anderson cooper. >> cooper used to do this job, yeah? >> apparently he's on -- what ever happened to him? you don't hear much. apparently he tweeted something very interesting. apparently he's on v vation. this is anderson like you've never seen him before. >> check it out. >> he is covered in mud there. he says he tweeted yesterday, you go to the top of the volcano and go into the warm mud, it's really weird and fun, colombia is a beautiful country. apparently he's vacationing in colombia, draping himself in mud, and tweeted it to his 1.4 million followers. >> this wouldn't be the first time, though, that we see him in sort of an interesting getup. take a look at this. >> gee, when they told me a
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leather gift i was thinking more in terms of an attachehease or a wallet. >> trust me, this is the latest in leather gear. >> really? why do you sound familiar? >> barry, of course. it's me. >> anderson! what are you doing here? >> i w wk for -- the whole reality show thing didn't work out for me. so i'm working here at the leather place. >> yes indeed. barry mitchell, the polka guy, and anderson in the leather shop apparently called the noose. i think that clip speaks for itself. >> "world news now" people like you've never seen them before. we talked about charlie sheen's ex brooke mueller. she's had a lot of struggles with drugs and alcohol. she went to rehab then had a relapse. she was going to mexico to get this special drug ibogaine. apparently she couldn't get on the plane, though, when she went to go to the mexican rehab because she couldn't find her passport. so that is to bebeontinued. they're trying to get her an emergency passport so she can get to that rehab. >> lots of rumors there about katy perry and russell brand breaking up. apparently katy went on to twitter and said, do not believe
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it, we're just fine, and the marriage apparently is solid. she went out there and wrote what you see there on your screen. privacy is our luxury, we don't need to flaunt our relationship. basically is what she said.
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here are somome stories to watch today on abc news. the military psychiatrist charged in the 2009 ft. hood shootings is due in court this afternoon for arraignment. nidal malik hasan is accused of killing 13 people. american airlines is expected to announce it's ordering hundreds of new jets to replace those in its aging fleet. both boeing and airbus can expect orders. good news there. houston rockets all-star center yao ming just announced his retirement at a news conference in shanghai. he's struggled with injuries during the past few years. that will be sad to see him go. >> yeah, prominent player. finally this half hour an update on once was and is now again our what?
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our favorite story of the day. a story we told you about two week ago. we told you about a woman who was michael jordan's high school sweetheart. >> i love their prom picture. it's the best. she found her love letters from jordan online and they werup for auction at the time. wtvd's alina machado reports, she's getting those letters back. >> i see my letter and i'm thinking, what in the world? >> reporter: that was laquetta robinson more than two weeks ago talking about the moment she realized someone had stolen this love letter michael jordan wrote to her when they dated in the '80s. the note and this prom picture landed leland.com and nabbed thousands in auction in 2004. robinson told us the items were stolen and sold without her permission. and her story went national. >> i guess i didn't see why it would draw the kind of attention it has drawn. >> reporter: we caught up with robinson after receiving this e-mail from nate d. sanders auctions. the l.a.-based auction house told us they recently purchased the stolen love letters and wanted to return them to their rightful owner. robinson also received this letter in the mail from the
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auction house asking her to send a police report so they could return the items. we called them with robinson, who was informed they apparently had not one but two of her letters. >> oh my god. >> reporter: confirming her fear that more items had been stolen than she initially thought. the auction house told robinson they paid a reputable and well-known company big bucks for the letters. >> she said in the thousands of dollars. she said "too much." >> reporter: while she's glad this auction house tracked her down and is promising to return the items robinson still wants to find out who took them from her. >> obviously whoever did it at the time didn't care about my feelings or what was personal to me, they were out to profit from it. >> that's so cool she got them back. that's so good. a piece of hisry there, man. >> it is stolen property, those love letters. also embarrassing. you know what you write when you're in high school, it's not exactly good journalism. >> shakespearean, no, it is not. for the record, michael jordan went to what college, do you know? >> north carolina. >> my alma mater, thank you very
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this morning on "world news now," mean season. today and tomorrow could be the hottest days in six years in the chicago area. >> from the midwest to texas and the east coast, the oppressive and potentially deadly conditions have millions of americans taking precautions with this heat. it's wednesday, july 20th. from abc news, this is "world news now." >> good morning, everybody. i'm rob nelson. >> i'm peggy bunker. the heat index in chicago could reach 110 today. as many cities opened cooling centers to keep people at risk for heat stroke safe and sound is what we're looking to keep people at. especially those who are older. keeping an eye on power consumption as people crank up the ac. >> i know that's tough on the environment but you can't tell people in this kind of weather.
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everyone's on full blast the last couple of days. >> just to get through it. get to a pool, something like that. >> anything to keep cool. also ahead the shaving cream hoax that interrupted james and rupert murdoch's testimony in the phone-hacking scandal. are their apologies in parliament enough to save the company? dramatic footage there. if you look closely that's the wife leaping up to slap the guy with the pie and she fell down in the midst of all the chaos. saved her man. >> thrust her into the center of this whole thing as people look into her and her background, h she's fiercely defensive of her husband. what a history she has. >> check out her history, yes. also coming up later this half hour, we've been asking you on our facebook page, would you buy a car that stops by itself? like this one. take a look at this. see what it's like to be behind the wheel of a car that takes over the controls when it thinks you might be in danger. >> i don't understand how bad a driver do you have to be that you need the car -- i mean, it's just -- >> how many stories do we do on
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people texting and talking behind the wheel and they don't realize the car in front of them has come to a stop? >> that's true, that's true. >> maybe like when my husband's driving. >> is he the bad driver amongst you two? >> i prefer to drive, let's put it that way. >> really? interesting, all right. we begin with that blazing heat that continues to torture millions of americans across the country. another red hot day is in store from the dakotas to the east coast. >> it's expected to feel as hot as 130 degrees in parts of the midwest. abc's diana alvear has the very latest. good morning, diana. >> reporter: well, rob and peggy, forget watermelon and lemonade. this summer has been a scorcher for the midwest. temperatures have been dangerously hot and there is no relief in sight. in minnesota, water wasn't just used to fight fires. it was used to help firefighters fight extreme heat. the nighttime offering no relief from the sweltering conditions. summer's sticky, sweaty misery has spread through the midwest. 20 states, from texas to minnesota and into ohio, are under a heat watch, warning or advisory.
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this 911 call from oklahoma the perfect example of how dangerous this heat has been. >> we had a man go down due to the heat. he's sweating profusely, we can't get his breathing or heart rate to slow down. >> reporter: in chicago, the mercury is threatening to push past 100 degrees. >> i'm lucky today i was able to get an aironditioning truck. normally i drive a truck that's not air conditioning. i was lucky today. >> reporter: from moveve to groundskeepers to construction workers. indiana's sizzling summer days have been brutal. >> you've got to keep hydrated. constant water. maybe a little cold pack on your arms when you get too hot. >> reporter: that's the priority in kentucky where high school football players are practicing under the hot sun. this pole sprays water to cool them down. this gauge measures temperature and humidity. if the heat index is over 104, teams are prohibited from practicing outside. >> we push them hard but we're
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not going to push them where something bad is going to happen. >> reporter: they won't be able to count on cooler days ahead. the heat wave is forecast to continue through the end of the ek as it heads east. and guess what? you're next. all that heat is coming your way. so make sure you stock up on water and stay hydrated. rob and peggy? >> that is the best advice. >> it really has been hot here. we have the humidity that we're fighting with here in new york. it does make it tough. like the rest of the country. don't do that. >> sorry. let's take a look at what's going on here across the country. even more humidity from philadelphia to raleigh. just got hot in here.ç severe storms in the upper midwest. afternoon thunderstorms around indianapolis, nashville, atlanta, jacksonville, and houston. more downpours in the four corners region. they can probably use some of that moisture. >> 90s on most places on the map. dallas, colorado springs, omaha, kansas city, baltimore, and detroit will bake today, again in the 90s. not so here in new york. just a mild, lovely 88. but very humid. be careful out there. >> balmy. pretty hot in the uk as this
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continues, this story here. britain's prime minister will feel the heat as he answers questions from parliament about the phone-hacking scandal. that's after media mogul rupert murdoch and his son testified yesterday. the bbc's nick robinson reports from london. >> reporter: the policemen, in case you wondered, are there to protect rupert and james murdoch, not take them in for questioning. the 80-year-old tycoon's wife wendi was behind him, offering physical and emotional support. his son and once heir apparent sat anxiously and protectively at his side throughout. >> i would like to say as well just how sorry i am and how sorry we are. >> reporter: they were sorry. they were humble. but whose fault was the criminality in their company? >> mr. murdoch, do you accept ultimately you are responsible for this whole fiasco? >> no. >> you are not responsible? who is responsible? >> the people that i trusted to run it and then maybe the people they trusted.
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>> reporter: who that was, he wouldn't say. >> this is not an excuse. maybe it's an explanation. "the news of the world" is less than 1% of our company. i employ 53,000 people around the world. >> reporter: in recent years, news international which owned "the news of the world" was run day to day by james murdoch. he blamed the police, the press complaints commission, and a failed internal inquiry for his company's failure to reveal what had gone wng. if i knew then what we know now, with the benefit of hindsight we can look at all these things. if i knew then what we know now, we would have taken more action around that and moved faster to get to the bottom of these allegations. >> reporter: then -- >> oh, oh! >> reporter: mayhem as parliamentary drama turned into a circus. the foam on a plate was delivered by a member of the public who was rewarded with a right hook from wife wendi.
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when rupert murdoch swept out of westminster, we were no closer to knowing who. we did know that this is a day he did not enjoy. nick robinson, bbc news, westminster. in other news práhsjjjr the army psychiatrist charged in the ft. hood shootings is due in military court today. major nidal hasan faces 13 counts of premeditated murder for those killed in the 2009 attack. he is expected to enter a plea of not guilty. hasan does face the death penalty if convicted. abc news has learned a mission to hunt down one of the world's most feared terrorists has failed. that's after word that two topo terrorists, the leader of al qaeda and also an american-born terror leader, are putting their forces together. here's abc's martha raddatz with exclusive details on a mission that went wrong. >>eporter: it is here on these dangerous streets where over the years we have watched al qaeda flourish, and leading them, anwar al awlaki, the terrorist officials say is most likely to launch the next successful attack against americans.
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last may, u.s. officials tell abc news that the u.s. military dispatched harrier jets, predator drones, and a special operations aircraft to follow a pickup truck in which al awlaki was a passenger. but this mission would be marred by what an official described as a series of errors. crews tracking awlaki were unable to keep the laser which guides the weapons homed in on the moving truck. the first missile came from the special operations aircraft. it missed. that gave awlaki time to call additional al qaeda operatives for help. more missiles were fired from the harrrrrs and predator. a huge fireball engulfed the truck. but u.s. military trackers sat stunned as they watched the truck drive right out of the fireball to safety. the aircraft tried to keep
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tracking awlaki but between the cloud cover and confusion in the air awlaki managed to switch vehicles. when the u.s.s. finally did hit the original truck, after three failed missile strikes, two of his operatives were killed but awlaki disappeared. still the number one tart. martha raddatz, abc news, washington. some lighter news now, an amazing sight in an east los angeles neighborhood. a stolen car slammed into a fire hydrant, shearing it off and sending a geyser of water more than 100 feet into the air yesterday. look at that. it took crews more than two hours totoinally shut off all that water. two homes had to be evacuated. the driverer actually suffered some head injuries. he was taken to the hospital and then as you can imagine was arrested. >> a lot of wasted water there. >> at least they kept cool. >> probably some places in the country would have appreciated a cool-down like that. the hunt for casey anthony shows no signs of slowing down. where is she? many people are wondering. a woman who looked a lot like anthony was seen getting off of
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a plane at orlando's executive airport yesterday, running into a building, covering her head with a blanket. she was wearing the same kind of clothing that ananony had on when she left jail on sunday. but her attorney says this woman is not casey anthony. it was all a practical joke on the part of the plane's owner. >> i don't think she'll be going back to orlando of all places. that's probably a safe bet. >> i don't think, yeah. >> believe it or not another casey anthony look-alike surfaced at kentucky's bluegrass fair. >> this one, though, was especially attractive to those unhappy with the outcome of that trial. they were able to take out their frustrations by throwing balls trying to sink her in the dunk tank. >> the organizers say it's all in good fun, they don't mean any harm, but you have to admit they are making a publicity splash. >> you see there quite a line. a lot of people there standing -- >> oh, yeah, man. people are all riled up. >> they've got the signs, very formal. >> people are gettttg into it. i don't get it. >> we'll be back with more "world news now." ♪
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a lot of people there saying -- ♪ stop in the name of love before you break my heart ♪ >> i think that's it. >> you had it down better than i did. there you go. >> keisha's doing it. >> very good. >> very soulful. >> "stop in the name of love" indeed. how w about stopping a car. are you ready for that? the car does this all by itself. >> by itself, wow. thnew technology actually got the stamp of approval from the insurance industry yesterday. abc's elisabeth leamy took to the wheel to see how it works. >> reporter: this car is only
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going six miles per hour. but just look at the damage done. >> altogether we're talking here the headlamp, the hood, the grille and everything, over $4,000 in damage. >> reporter: low-speed rear-enders are the most common kind of crash. and volvo's city safety system may be the solution. >> okay, you guys are ready? >> reporter: cruising down the test track at 10 miles an hour, i deliberately take my eyes off the road like a distracted driver. but an infrared laser in the windshield senses the car in front of me and the vehicle itself firmly applies the brakes. >> okay, and there we go. >> reporter: take a closer look. i fight the urge and keep my foot far away from the brake. once again, the vehicle stops itself. a good 12 inches before impact. a dashboard message alerts me that city safety kicked in. is this the next big thing? >> we think it is the next big thing. we want to prevent crashes before they happen if we can.
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and we do have a lot of new technology like volvo city safety that can help drivers to avoid crashes. >> reporter: by comparing insurance claims from volvos that are equipped with city safety to other cars that are not, the institute determined that the system eliminates more than one-quarter of low-speed crashes. >> there is always the risk that the technology could make a mistake. but it's much more likely that a human could make a mistake because we're all so easily distracted. >> reporter: volvo will make city safety standard in four models by 2012. memewhile, other car companies are racing to bring their own futuristic self-braking technology into the present. elisabeth leamy, abc news. ruckersville, virginia. >> just a few questions. one, does it work in rough weather, heavy rain, snow or ice? what if you're going 80? >> different speeds. already viewers are weighing in. wnnfans.com. amanda says, i don't like this idea, i don't like to rely on a computer to keep me alive, i like to apply my own brakes thank you very much. >> i agree. nothing can beat human eyes.
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we'll see. >> those slow-speed chases -- chases. accidents. that could really help out. >> chases, the police coming in tonight. >> at six miles an hour. that could help you out if that's the case. >> we'll be right back, everybody, stay with us.
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young girls in stressful competitions and their seemingly overbearing mothers. you may think we're talking about "toddlers in tiaras." >> but you've got a tiara at home, come on now, rob. this is not pageants. we're talking about dancing. abc's bianna golodryga reports there's critics questioning whether there's just too much pressure on these little kids. >> hip, hip. >> reporter: they're sassy. they're dedicated. and they can contort their bodies in ways most people were find impossible. meet the newest reality show "superstars."
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pint-sized dancing phenoms ranging in age from 6 to 13. but this is not just about the tiny dancers. this is also about their moms. in fact,t,he new lifetime show is called "dance moms." a group of pittsburgh mothers who at times can make the moms of "toddlers in tiaras" look like laid-back parents. >> i tell you, what you're not going to do this to my kid! >> out the door. out. >> reporter: there's only one woman who can keep the girls and their moms in check. >> girls, don't look at your mothers. i am the coach. i am the teacher. >> reporter: abby lee miller. more like drill sergeant than dance coach. abby's no holds barred coaching style puts the girls through intense daily boot camp-like classes. sometimes more than four hours a day. turning little girls into big dancing sensations. it comes with a hefty price tag. classes, wardrobe and travel can run upwards of $20,000 a year. >> when you leave my studio, you can go immediately to disney world in orlando.
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you can go move to new york city and get a broadway show right out of high school. you can go to vegas and be a showgirl. >> reporter: we caught up with the coach, her pupils, and their moms in las vegas. where the group is competing in the thunderstruck dance tour. when do you have time to play? when do you have time totoe a kid? >> never. >> as long as i'm having fun and i still have my friends i don't care. >> do you ever feel like sometimes you just want to say, you know what, mom, leave me alone, this is my life, let me do what i want to do? >> yes. >> a lot. >> what does your mom say? in response? >> she says, i'm just trying to help you. >> reporter: these tiny dancers are here to compete. and this brings out the competitive spirit in their dance moms. >> do you think your moms are over the top? or obsessed? >> what do you mean by that? >> are they just too involved in your lives? >> they're just like normal dance moms. >> yeah. >> i think every dance mom would do that. >> it does make them look crazy.
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they're not like that. >> reporter: crazy or not, the pressure cooker of the dance life can cause stress at home. >> my ex-to-be claims that dance has ruined our marriage. >> reporter: and at school. >> i do find myself at times, you know, putting dance before school. and it's probably not right. >> reporter: and one of the biggest criticisms these mothers face is that the sexy costumes and makeup are just too much for these young girls. >> what do you think when people make a comparison between this and "toddlers in tiaras"? >> the beauty aspect, the costumes, the hair, the makeup, that's one glimpse of their whole experience. >> my husband supports my daughter very much. he doesn't always agree that she's in the right place. >> he doesn't like fake eyelashes? >> no. there's nothing my husband hates more than seeing his little girl dressed unlike a little girl. >> reporter: bianna golodryga, abc news, las vegas. >> nuhuhh. too grown, too fast, the makeup, the moves, i don't get it. >> i agree with that. >> blows my mind. >> then again, what if you want to support your kid's interest?
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what if that is their interest? >> just all in moderation, that's all. >> that's a lot of makeup for a little kid. tiny light outfits. medicare supplement nsurance card, too. medicare is one of the great things about turning 65, but it doesn't cover everything. in fact, it only pays up to " 80% of your part b expenses. if you're already on or eligible for medicare, call now to find out how an aarp... insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company, not paid by medicare part b.. that can save you from paying .up to thousands of dollars... out of your own pocket. these are the only medicare supplement insurance plans... exclusively endorsed by aarp. when you call now, you'll get this free information kit... with all y y need to enroll. put their trust in aarp p medicare supplement insuranc. plus you'll get this free guide to understanding medicare. the prices are competitive. i can keep my own doctor.
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"world news now" delivers your "morning papers." >> all right, if you're one ofof the healthy eaters out there, this is not your story. >> shocking. oh my goodness. >> this is not your story. >> horrifying. >> there's been something they call the extreme eating awards which basically ranks the fattest meals in america. >> all on one plate. if you want to eat a calorie-dense meal this is it. from cheesecake factory, farmhouse cheeseburger. grilled pork belly, cheddar cheese, onions, mayo, fried egg. more than 1,500 calories, 36 grams of saturated fat, more than 3,200 milligrams of sodium. also this. the denny's meltdown, which is four fried mozzarella sticks, melted american cheese, 1,300 calories, 21 grams saturated fat, 3,000 milligrams of sodium. cold stone shakedown. ice cream, pecans, brownie, fudge, caramel, almost 1,600
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calories, 42 grams of saturated fat. another one with peanut butter, chocolate and milk, 2,000 calories and 68 grams of fat. again at the cheesecake factory, red velvet cake, which is two slices of cheesecake and two slices of red velvet cake, 1,500 calories, 59 grams of saturated fat. that is three days' worth of fat. in that dessert. >> three days' worth of fat in one indulgence. that is truly disgusting to think about when you're ordering. you're eating a week's worth of calories in one day. >> that mozzarella thing sounds good. >> yesterday we were talking about this walking and texting at the same time in philly which we've all seen people not watching where they're going. well, turns out that it's not true that they are going to ticket people for walking and texting at the same time. the deputy mayor is saying that in philadelphia they will give you a warning. arena cutler says so far about 600 bicyclists, 100 motorists have been warned to
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pay attention, stop texting while walking or riding their bike or what have you and be more careful. the ticketing thing is not true. >> there were some erroneous news reports and we wanted to correct it up. text and walk in philly and be relaxed. >> there you go. >> this one i love. tae bo. have you ever done this exercise? kicking and all this crazy stuff. >> billy, remember him. >> apparently -- there you go. theme music. there was a building in south korea, doing a tae bo class, on the 12th floor of a 39-story building. i don't know who was in this class, the jumping around was so intense the building started to shake. >> i was there. >> people had to run out of the building, they thought it was an earthquake. >> kick out. >> watch. be careful with that leg. be careful in your tae bo class, don't freak out the people beneath you. that's kind of insane. >> if you're making the building feel like it's an earthquake you're probably getting a great workout. >> what size are the people in this room that the building was shshing? >> i think they were really into it. haven't you ever done tae bo? >> no, i avoid exercise. >> this song especially, get into it, rob.ab
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this morning on "worldews now," tycoon's testimony. how media mogul rupert murdoch and his son answered tough questions before members of the british parliament. >> and how the man with a shaving cream pie and his dramatic interruption are now grabbing all the headlines. it is wednesday, july 20th. from abc news, this is "world news now." >> good morning. i'm peggy bunker. >> i'm rob nelson. while rupert murdoch and his son apologized for the phone-hacking scandal, we cannot get over that dramatic moment when a man with a shaving cream pie interrupted and how rupert murdoch's wife jumped in and stopped -- she actually slapped him hard. you can see her hand in the air about to go for it. >> in fact fell to the ground afterwards. she hit iym so hard.
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a lot of p pple are saying this was probably the best thing that could have happened because it sort of deflected from the moment. >> oh, yes. >> in the series of what was going on. quite a shocking moment there. >> never dull. >> never dull, that's for sure. also coming up this morning the stagnant and oppressive hot air mass that has put about half the country into the danger zone. just north of the border a rainstorm that brought some relief actually did not, however. take a look at how this sewer blew up causing a real mess in montreal. >> look at that. oh, man. this heat is crazy. i heard last night 1,000 records across the country broken in this month alonene some folks won't feel any relief until the end of the month. >> some people so desperate for rain. first the crazy winter, then a crazy spring, then a super-hot summer. it does continue weatherwise. >> mother nature. nothing to play with. later in the show what a tremendous odyssey for three elephants in danger of being tracked down and killed in africa. how they actually made it to safety here in the u.s. good story. >> the pachyderms. there you go. >> looks good.
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all right, first britain's prime minister is on the hot seat today in the phone-hacking scandal. david cameron cut short a trip to africa in order to answer questions from parliament. >> of course it would be hard to top the drama that unfolded when rupert murdoch and his son testified. abc's scott goldberg explains why. >> reporter: it was about two hours into the hearing when a man apparently carrying a shaving cream pie, stormed rupert murdoch and called him a greedy billionaire. murdoch's wife sprang to action. police handcuffed the attacker. murdoch was shaken but okay. it was the point of highest drama in a civil but tense exchange with british lawmakers. >> this is the most humbled day of my life. >> reporter: both murdoch and his son james apologized for the phone-hacking scandal that's threatening the core of their company. >> these actions do not live up to the standards that our company aspires to everywhere around the world. >> reporter: news corporation has been reeling for two weeks since the murdochs shut down the british tabloid "news the world." that was after allegations its
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employees illegally hacked into the voice mail of celebrities, politicians, and a 13-year-old murder victim. >> mr. murdoch, do you accept ultimately you are responsible for this whole fiasco? >> no. >> reporter: murdoch and his son said they did not know employees paid hush money to settle lawsuits. and he said he had seen no evidence that 9/11 victims in the u.s. had their voice mail hacked. the woman who ran murdoch's british newspapers also said she was sorry. >> of course there were mistakes made in the past. >> reporter: the scandal will not end in this hearing in parliament.ç there's a criminal probe under way in britain. the u.s. justice department also will investigate news corporation to see if american emplployees engaged in a conspiracy to pay bribes to british police. scott goldbebe for abc news, new york. >> his wife has a pretty interesting background. >> she's got an interesting background. a bit on the tabloid side. you saw her sort of stand up and defend him instantly. in fact, take a look at this. it's another shot of this person who brought the shaving cream
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pie so to speak. maybe she would have gotten -- there's wendi deng, four years older than her stepson. >> like a 40-year agaggap. she's four years older than his stepson. got married in 1999. lucky he married a younger woman because he had someone to save him. >> she sprang into action, his infamous ego saying, nope, i have no blame to shoulder here. he continues on, that's for sure. look what happened as well to news corp. stock price during murdoch's testimony, it kept ticking higher. at the end of the day shares rose more than 5%. the company restored more than $2.5 billion. that's a fraction of the $8 billion lost since the scandal first broke. and now here at home to washington where president obama says that it's time to talk turkey now that a debt deal is in sight. as that august 2nd deadline looms. it is getting closer and closer. >> days away now. wall street though liked the progress. the dow jones jumped more than
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200 points. abc's john hendren has the very latest. good morning, john. >> reporter: good morning, rob and peggy. americans are getting downright angry with washington over the debt crisis. president obama says there's now reason to hope it could all be over. across the nation, voters are fed up with all sides in the debt crisis. >> they need to get off the dime. >> we've had enough and we want you to work together. >> get it done for god's sake. >> reporter: now, at last, there may be hope for an 11th hour break in the impasse. >> i think we now are seeing the potential for a bipartisan consensus. >> reporter: a bipartisan group of senators -- the gang of six -- has crafted a plan that would include cuts to entitlements, medicare, medicaid, and social security, and close tax loopholes. >> my hope is that we can start gathering everybody over the next couple of days to choose a clear direction and to get this issue resolved. >> reporter: on wall street, stocks rallied within minutes as investors seized on the newfound hope of an agreement that would raise the nation's credit limit
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before the government runs out of money on august 2nd. around the time the president spoke inside the white house, outside, partisan warfare continued as freshmen republicans rally accusing the president of failing to come up with a plan of his own. >> we need your plan. >> the bill is passed. >> reporter: house members passed a republican measure t$ would raise the nation's credit limit, cut $2.4 trillion in spending, and require a constitutional amendment to balance the budget. >> he gets his increase in the debt limit of $2.4 trillion. what we get are real cuts in spending and real reforms in place that will make sure that this problem never, ever happens again. >> reporter: that house plan is pure political theater. it has no chance of getting passed in the democratic senate. and president obama has vowed to veto it. rob and peggy? minnesota lawmakers have convened for a special showdown hoping to end an almost three week long state government shutdown. the republican-controlled legislature needs to approve nine budget bills. those bills must be signed by
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the democratic governor before the state can get back to normal. the hope is that some of the 22,000 state workers laid off during the shut-down can actually return to work this week. republican presidential hopeful michele bachmann insists that her headaches will not affect h h ability to serve in the white house as president. on the campaign trail in south carolina, bachmann said that like 30 million other americans, she does suffer from migraines. she also said that they are easily controlled by prescription medication. 75 former pro football players are now suing the nfl because of game-related concussions. the league is accused of intentionally hiding the harmful effects of concussions for 90 years. according to tmz, the nfl had been aware of the risks to a player's brain since the 1920s. but the league did not acknowledge the risk of brain damage until just last year. philadelphia eagles quarterback michael vick appeared on capitol hill to push his anti-dogfighting message. vick backs legislation to prohibit attendance at organized animal fights with extra penalties for allowing minors to attend.
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vick served 18 months in prison on dog-fighting charges. he says he does not want children to repeat his mistakes. many of you don't need us to tell you this but more than 30 states are simmering under a lingering wave of hot, humid air. in central iowa, for example, the heat index there topped 131 degrees. unbelievable. more heat-related decembers are now being reported. abc's matt gutman is in oklahoma city where they've hit triple digits almost every day this month. >> reporter: the deadly heat battering the country's midsection has so far set or broken 1,000 records this month alone. it kicked up this towering dust storm in phoenix and left roads buckling on highways from texas all the way to minnesota. with this camp suffering through the heat, abc's chris bury spoke to its camp director. >> this is the hottest record, hottest week on record here at camp tanaduna.
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>> reporter: in chicago this heat stirred up this soupy fog. dangerous enough to chase swimmers from lake michigan. this noaa map shows the heat gobbling up most of the country like a virus. on average, the heat kills more americans than hurricanes or tornados. here in oklahoma city, five highways buckled this month. last year, zero. >> you have that concrete that's expanding in extreme heat. and of course it doesn't have any place to go. you can't go down because of the base. so it has no choice but to pop up. >> reporter: and kids with no choioi but to head indoors. >> let's go, too hot. >> reporter: how hot is it? we just took this juicy t-bone out of the fridge. we're going to see if we can cook it on the dashboard of this car. i parked it ten minutes ago. and already the dashboard reads 151 degrees. we came ba about two hours later. about 195 degrees. experts say this is cooked enough to eat. now this is the said steak.
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can't say i could eat it myself but it is cooked probably medium-well. bad news for folks here at camp shilo and the rest of oklahoma, six or seven more days of triple-digit heat lie ahead. matt gutman, abc news, oklahoma city. >> mm. >> i wouldn't eat that steak either. >> looks tasty. >> doesn't look like a good idea. in montreal, it's not the heat but it's actually the rain that's causing problems. so much rain that the rush of watetecreated a powerful street geyser. as you can see it blew off a manhole cover, take a look at this, lifted this car off the pavement. wait for it, wait for it. there you go. now the bystander who took the video said the car was badly damaged. i would say so. forecasters say that 2 inches of rain fell in less than 15 minutes. if your car's doing that and not on purpose, you're probably on a geyser. >> oh, man. what a summer. >> it's just crazy. >> we need a calm few months. can we get it, please? >> 2 inches of rain in 15 minutes. >> let's take a look at what's going to happen today in the forecast. on top of this oppressive heat,
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you can expect afternoon thunderstorms in indianapolis, nashville, atlanta, jacksonville, and houston. also we have hail, gusty winds and a chance of tornados from fargo to duluth. and thunderstorms in the desert southwest. showers around portland and seattle, no shocker there. >> 80s in the northern rockies. 108 ininhoenix. 90s in dallas. the twin cities, kansas city, and chicago. 88 here in the big apple. more 90s from baltimore to new orleans. if you think that life on the farm is conservative and perhaps a little bit confining, think again. this is a whole different kind of farming. >> austria's young farmers association is coming out with its calendar for next year and it is anything but conservative. hey, girl. the pinup-style calendar features both women and men promoting a more modern -- pretty modern -- image of agricultural workers. >> you have to trademark that. hey, girl. that's your signature phrase. >> that works more than you think late at night. >> we are told it's distributed
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all over the world, this calendar. you can see why it's sold out every year for the last 12 years. i like that it's equal opportunity. both the good-looking young, attractive male farmers and good-looking young, attractive female farmers. >> i'll get you that for christmas. more "world news now" coming up. coming up. you go next if you had a hehehehere would hoveround power chair? the statue o oliberty? the grand canyon? it's all possible ith a hoveround., tom: hi i'm tom kruse, inventor rand founder of hoveround., when we say you're free to see the world, we mean it. call today and get a free overound information kit, that includes a video and full color brochure. dennis celorie: "it's by far the best chair i've ever owned." terri: "last year, 9 out of 10 people got their hoveround for "little or no money." jim plunkitt: "no cost. absolutely no cost to me." breaking news...when you call today, we'll include a free hoveround collapsible grabber with
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♪ i'm a rocket man ♪ rocket man >> sing it, peggy. >> i'm supposed to talk it. i was having a moment. it is going to be the last full day in space for the crew of "atlantis." they are set to land one final time tomorrow. should be an exciting morning for us as we watch the developments and they blast off back here to earth. >> end of an era for the country for sure. astronauts already left the international space station. the bbc's jonathan amos has the details.
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>> "atlantis" departing international space station for the last time. >> reporter: the bell sounds on the space station to mark a departing ship. the "atlantis" shuttle firing its thrusters to push away from the platform one last time. the international space station was built by the shuttle over the past decade. and emotions were running high as it prepared to leave its creation. >> when a generation accomplishes a great thing it's got a right to stand back and for just a moment admire and take pride in its work. >> reporter: before the shuttle undocked there had been a fond farewell between the "atlantis" crew and those left behind on the station. the doors between them were sealed with a historic memento. an american flag flown on the first-ever shuttle mission. before heading home "atlantis" photographed the space station from new angles, assessing the 400-ton complex which has to operate in the harshest environment. it will land in florida on thursday. and nasa will officially close its shuttle program 30 days later. >> so fergie, chunky, sandy and
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rex, get her home safely and enjoy the last couple of days in space shuttle "atlantis." >> to the whole teamamt's been an incredible ride. >> reporter: jonathan amos, bbc news. >> very cool. this landing will take place tomorrow which will sort of happen on our shift. we'll be watchchg this every single moment. tomorrow will be 42 years ago to the day that astronauts neil armstrong and buzz aldrin walked on the moon. and that time we did it too. >> that was our little vacation, a little time from the show. we'll be right back, everybody, don't go far. medicare. it doesn't cover everything. and what it doesn't cover can cost you some money. that's why you should consider an aarp... medicare supplement insurance plan... insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. all medicare supplement insurance plans can help pay... some of what medicare doesn't, so you could save... thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket expenses.
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ththe big elephants and their big trip to pittsburgh. >> reporter: thandi, seeni and sukiri. accompanied by the handlers with whom they grew up. and a man whose children watched a documentary about culling in population control which killed adults and left youngsters orphaned. >> please, dadad, mommy, we've got to stop this from happening, can we do something, can we please do something? >> reporter: in 1992, udum and his wife created an elephant orphanage on their botswana farm for these three elephants. >> the best thing we could have done. children, thank you for that. >> reporter: several years later the elephants were moved to a nature reserve. then when sexually mature, they were moved to a camp in botswana's delta. that's where last year a handler was injured while working one of the elephants. and because of the camp's remoteness, died. >> the incident and an injury that in pittsburgh they wouldn't even have kept him overnight in >> reporter: that is where the
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zoo came in. udum's daughter, working at disney, learned of the icc and called dr. baker. baker and a multi-national team leapt into action. the botswana government had given the elephants a reprieve but they had to be exported. >> we had never done anything of this magnitude before. you're talking about moving three animals from two continents, three countries, here to the icc. to try to work through all the kinks, all the permits, all the transfers, getting a plane that's big enough. >> reporter: it took these crates, a 747, a 20-hour flight, cranes, and a big truck. >> it was a long trip but they went through it very well, they came off the truck, they were very calm, they were very relaxed, everything was just -- you couldn't have i think wrote the script any better. >> it was a leap of faith. we arrived and i looked around at this wonderful environment. i thought, now it's god's own country for these elephants. >> those are three lovely ladies. they're going to be under quarantine for 60 to 90 days. if their health is okay they're
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going to meet tyson, the zoo's male elephant. he's going to say -- >> hey, pachyderm. >> hey, pachyderm.
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$t[ drew ] it's the #1 selling lipstain in the u.s. [ male announcer ] outlast lipstain. from easy, breezy, beautiful covergirl. ♪ i just need somebody to love ♪ i need somebody i i need somebody ♪ ♪ i need somebody >> okay, who doesn't remember the movie "wedding crashers." owen wilson, great moments, some great comedy in there. >> the venture capitalist from new hampshire, vermont maple syrup cocolomerate. remember that? >> oh, yes. >> we close out this half hour with some other wedding crashers but these ones are famous. we call it bieber on the beach. abc's neal karlinsky has the details. >> reporter: what could be more perfect? a beachfront malibu wedding, cocktails, justin bieber tunes filling the air. and then -- >> oh my god, it's justin bieber! oh my god! >> reporter: that's right, the kid in the t-shirt is the real justin bieber.
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no invitation, no warning, no problem in this clip from tmz. >> so we just crashed it. we didn't really know what was going on. we heard a party. so we decided to just come. >> reporter: he says he was going for a walk on the beach with his girlfriend selena gomez when he heard his own music blaring and decided to become the sort of wedding crasher few people ever get. the kind people actually want. >> let's party. >> i was singing on the microphone his song "one time" that i love. all of a sudden i felt a tap on my shoulder. >> i saw her crying. i was like, oh my gosh! >> reporter: in a coincidence so strange we didn't even believe it at first, t t bride's cousin, an obsessed justin bieber fan, had a surprise meeting with him earlier this year courtesy of "the ellen degeneris show." >> oh my god, i love you. >> thank you. >> my y usin was screaming. i put my hand over my mouth. i was in shock. i couldn't say anything. >> reporter: he didn't stick around long. only about five or ten minutes.
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just enough to give rob mccool and janine holdgren a one of a kind wedding photo and bragging rights to one of the world's great wedding crasher stories. bieber, what are you going to do next? >> i'm going to disney land! >> reporter: neal karlinsky, abc news. >> they're actually not going to disneyland, they're going to graceland. that's where they're going for their honeymoon, the couple. >> good for them. i don't get the whole bieber craze but i think it/s!very cool he stopped by and had a real human moment. unrehearsed, unscripted, just kind of crashed the party. >> you don't have bieber fever? >> i am not a teenage girl. i think it's cool he did that, good for him. >> if you ever get married and bieber crash your reception wouldn't you be sort of psyched? >> janet jackson or beyonce, crash my wedding. >> if beyonce crashes your reception, you're going to be in trouble. >> that would be -- choices, choices.c
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this morning on "world news now," parliament pie. the shaving cream hoax that interrupted serious testimony by media mogul rupert murdoch and his son. >> they apologized for the phone-hacking scandal that is threatening their entire corporate dynasty. it's wednesday, july 20th. from abc news, this is "world news now." >> and good wednesday morning, i'm rob nelson. >> i'm peggy bunker. rupert murdoch has his wife, wendi deng, she saw the man with the shaving cream pie, and stopped him. what a moment that was. and there was a lot of tense questioning going on. also this answer session definitely interrupted as everybody saw the kerfuffle, skafuffle, take place. >> brave word chchce for 2:00 a.m.
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fascinating story. quite a scene there in parliament yesterday. >> don't get me giggling. also this half hour a pennsylvania guy who t tught he had covered all his bases, this moron, while trying to break into an atm. he brought a sledgehammer, covered up the camera, but left empty-handed. wait till you hear the rest of the story. do you know the movie "barbershop," you can't bust into the atm machine? am i the only one that paid attention? >> i thought the whole thing was to chain it up and tow it behind the pickup. that was the new thingng get the standalone atm and pull >> criminals these days aren't thinking. >> didn't work out. also coming up a little bit later, remember that north carolina woman who was michael jordan's high school sweetheart? we had the prom picture, the whole nine yards. there she is. an auction house sold an old love letter of hers. we are sharing now a heart-warming chapter of the saga in our favorite story of the day. everybody said, get this woman back her love letter. she couldn't believe she saw them up on ebay. she thought she still had possession of it. >> michael's written many love letters.
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i'm glad they got one of them back. first the dramatic developments as rupert murdoch testified before british lawmakers and the 80-year-old media tycoon nearly took a shaving cream pie to the face. >> how about that. during his testimony, murdoch said he was humbled and ashamed but he took no direct responsibility for the hacking scandal. abc's jeffrey kofman covered that hearing in london. >> reporter: james murdoch was about to answer a question when suddenly on the left it was so fast it was hard to see what happened. look again slowly. a man with a paper plate covered in shaving cream takes aim at rupert murdoch. muttering "you greedy billionaire." the woman in pink, murdoch's 42-year-old wife, wendi deng, slaps the assailant. who falls backwards.4& was arrested. this is a day rupert murdoch and his son did not want to see. they were summoned to answer questions from politicians about the scandal that has rocked this country. >> do you have anything you want to say to the victims of phone hacking?
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>> reporter: allegations of widespread criminal activity by reporters at murdoch's now-shuttered tabloid "the news of the world" and a cover-up involving politicians and the police. listen to this, from a man infamous for his ruthlessness and his arrogance. >> this is the most humble day of my life. >> reporter: rupert murdoch, born in australia, age 80, an american citizen, presides over a global empire worth $33 billion in revenue. father of six children from three marriages, he's the boss, but the buck does not stop with him. and he is not planning to step aside. >> because i feel that people i've trusted betrayed the company and me and it's for them to pay. i think that frankly i'm the best person to clean this up. >> reporter: at his side, james. born in london, age 38, an american citizen. runs company operations in europe and asia. when he was younger he was the family rebel.
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now, if he can hold on, he'll take over from his dad. >> if i knew then what we know now, we would have taken more action around that and moved faster to get to the bottom of these allegations. >> reporter: it was james who did most of the talking. coming to his father's aid as he stumbled. and what about the woman who saved her husband from humiliation? she is wendi deng, born in china, four years older than her stepson, an american citizen. she became rupert murdoch's third and fiercely loyal wife in 1999. the other thing that we heard over and over from murdoch, father and son, was that they y simply didn't know what was going on at "the news of the world." they had no idea of the alleged widespread criminality that has now come out. they insist had they known they would have moved long ago to stop it. jeffrey kofman, abc news, london. >> and this story is not stopping. the london newspaper "the guardian" is reporting members of parliament may release a report today that says murdoch's company tried to deliberately block a criminal investigation into the phone hacking at "news
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of the world." here we go again. >> interesting to hear denial saying they knew absolutely nothing about this because most people that have worked with rupert murdoch say he's heavily involved with every aspect of the different papers and television, that sort of thing. it raises eyebrows that they could say, have no idea. >> these stories, scoops, photos. no questions ever about how did you get it? we'll see where it goes. >> very questionable. stocks overseas have follnged wall street into higher territory this morning over word there could be a federal debt deal. the plan is being offered by a group of senators from both parties. it would seek an immediate $500 billion down payment on cutting the deficit. they're working towards cutting $4 trillion over 10 years. >> my hope is that we can start gathering everybody over the next couple of days to choose a clear direction and to get this issue resolved. >> republicans in the house passed the so-called cut, cap and balance plan to resolve the debt crisis. but president obama has already
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said he will veto the bill if it ever reached his desk. president obama says he supports legislation that would overturn a 15-year-old law defining marriage as a union between one man and one woman. proponents of same-sex marriage say today's senate hearing on the respect for marriage act is an important first step. the bill would allow all lawfully married couples to receive federal marriage benefits and protections. that includes same-sex couples married in states where such unions are legal. at least 14 people are under arrest accused of a cyber attack on a well-known payment service website. investigators say that the 14 suspects tried to hack into pay pal's computer system. the suspects were then rounded up worldwide. two were arrested in the u.s. investigators say the hackers were retaliating against pay pal for shutting down wikileaks accounts after wikileaks posted
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classified government documents police in pennsylvania are trying to track down a man who tried to make an unauthorized withdrawal from an atm. he didn't use a bank card but he came armed with some heavy tools, including a shingle ripper and a 14-pound sledgehammer. wtae's jennifer miele reports from suburban pittsburgh. >> reporter: this is surveillance video from the new stanton branch of the first commonwealth bank. the man with the tools thinks he's covering his tracks. watch as the screen goes black. that's him spray painting the camera inside the atm. but he didn't realize another camera is pointed directly at him. and it captures his every move for more than ten minutes. he struggles to pry open the machine, giving each one of those tools a try. and he got away with? >> zero. not only that, he left his tools. for all that work that he was doing he decided to leave. and he left his tools behind. probably an exhausting effort, actually. you could see how vigorously he's working at this. he's probably physically exhausted trying to get into this machine. >> reporter: he walked away without any money but caused
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more than $20,000 worth of damage to the atm. >> he's beating on the machine, he's trying to get at the safe. the safe is obviously very secured. with him being there for over ten minutes he's still unable to get into the safe. >> reporter: if police find him he'll be charged with felony criminal mischief and attempted theft. >> got to rereect persistence on one hand but come on, man. ten minutes? >> shingle ripper? usually there are more than one camera at the atms. >> these days? oh, man. >> didn't really cover your bases that well. oh, boy. >> better luck next time, dude. the ongoing heat wave is keeping road crews busy across the midwest and the south. a highway in eastern iowa is among many that buckled in the heat, causing severe traffic problems. repair crews are having trouble keeping up. in parts of iowa yesterday, the heat index topped 131 degrees. in that part of the country, as we say around here in neneyork, it's not just the heat, it's the humidity. that's what we all say around
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here, especially when your hair goes whoo. >> that is the truth. >> it is the humidity. here's your wednesday weather now. heat watches, warnings and advisories in more than 30 states. from the dakotas to the east coast. severe storms with a chance of tornados from fargo to duluth. scattered thunderstorms from minneapolis to jacksonville including much of the gulf coast and more rain in the rockies. >> a day for the beach or the pool. that's for sure. phoenix hits a hot 108. albuquerque 93. salt lake city 86. upper 90s in the twin cities, chicago, and dallas. mostly 90s along the east coast. anyone who has hit the links dreams of sinking a hole in one. and let's face it, most golfers never come close. i'm pretty good at putt putt. that's all i've got. >> that's never going to happen to me that's for sure. 6-year-old reagan kennedy already has her ace. she was golfing with her dad on a course in illinois when she aced an 85-yard shot on the 3rd hole. >> cameras unfortunately though did nonocatch the moment. but the whole family is bragging about it. reagan's been golfing since she was 2 years old. now that she's aced a hole in one she says her next goal is to
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beat her dad. she seems to be well on her way. that young already? >> that's my kind of golf. i got a hole in one, nobody saw it but i got it. >> i would want some proof, yeah. >> she has a great swing though. >> do you play? >> i'm horrible but i try. >> i just drive the cart. we'll be back with more "world news now" after this.
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well, the baby boomers are at it again. they've been shaking things up for decades. why change now as they enter retirement? >> exactly. the latest institution getting a boomer makeover is marriage. as abc's claire shipman reports more boomer retirees choose to be together but apart. >> reporter: side by side
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through life, hand in hand growing older. that was supposed to be the best thing about retirement. right? think again. meetethe chatfields. jane chatfield thrives on the rich bustle of city life. >> i love i suppose first of all being around young people. all those young ponytails bobbing up and down as they stay in shape. the rowers on the river. that's gorgeous. >> reporter: she and her husband john spent most of their marriage a team. upononetirement, they looked toward maine, his favorite haunt. >> we had the first conversations about retirement to maine sometime before we were married. >> reporter: a funny thing happened on the way to a full-time existence there. he loved it, she didn't, especially the winters. jane decided to make cambridge, massachusetts, her winter home. >> there are times when i miss her very, very much. >> do you think your because of this arrangement?ger
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>> i think i've been less wimpy. i realize the time we're together, i can be more articulate about what i really need or want or would like. and i think you respect me more because of that. >> well, it's certainly true. >> i can beat you up. >> it's a different generation of women that want to have a voice. it's no longer just adjusting to the husband's retirement. i think we're going to see more living together but apart. >> reporter: and the chatfields aren't alone. while jim is at home pursuing his passions -- working at a museum or biking -- susan's in honduras, volunteering for months at a time. or living in san antonio, helping underprivileged kids. the lesson? >> if your spouse is truly happy and content in their heart, your relationship is extremely strong. >> reporter: the rosses s celebrated their 31st wedding anniversary this week. maybe this sort of separation is going to be good for marriage vows.
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that could be good news because one-third of boomeps@m can't agree on where they want to retire. but an even bigger percentage say they can't agree on a financial plan. next in our series, money. claire shipman, abc news, washington. >> boy. money's the big one. >> always. >> that's the main cause of divorces, financial arguments, couples can't agree on a budget, that sort of thing. >> that's like the idea you've been married awhile, you still are individual enough to say, i like to do my summers here, i like to do my thing over here. we're still together but we're separate people. i think that's an important lesson. >> i can see how that would work for some couples but not other couples like if you have twins. >> oh! i look like grady from "sanford and son," " u look like sophia from "the golden girls." >> turns out i do not age well. >> oh, man. i love our graphics. that was good. >> all right. >> bea arthur. she divorced tiger woods, dated somebody new, and discovered quite a surprise. can this girl catch a break?
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elin nordegren. a very well known former anchor of this show is putting some extra skin in today's "skinny." stay with us.
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♪ skinny so skinny sounding good there. >> thank you, thank you. >> time for "the skinny" on this wednesday morning. we're starting out with a little bit of elin nordegren news. tiger woods' ex, gorgeous ex. >> elin, yes. >> she was totally blind-sided by the tiger woods scandal. turns out she's dating her new boyfriend, jamie dingman, he's been around the block a time or two. well, see there on the screen. that's rachel uchitel, one of the alleged tiger woods mistresses. apparently her payout from tiger was 10 million bucks. we know from some real estate news here in new york city she bought like a $3 million apartment on park avenue. apparently there was some e sor of payout. turns out this new boyfriend, jamie dingman, had a fling with rachel uchitel that elin is just findininout about. and so she's sort of wondering if this guy's yet another tiger.
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>> rachel, she stays busy. she's in the scene, let's put it that way. >> she's definitely in the scene. we were sort of listing all the people she's been hooked up with that we've heard about and the list was long. yeah. >> she can't catch a break. tiger, then this guy. >> i know. and she's such a -- we haven't heard much from her. she's been doing a good job of keeping a low profile. >> for the kids and that's good. >> yeah. >> you may remember former anchororf "world news now," the one and only anderson cooper. >> cooper used to do this job, yep. >> apparently he's on -- what ever happened to him? you don't hear much. apparently he tweeted something very interesting. apparently he's on vacation. this is anderson like you've never seen him before. >> check it out. >> he is covered in mud there. he says he tweeted yesterday, you go to the top of the volcano and go into the warm mud, it's really weird and fun, colombia is a beautiful country. apparently he's vacationing in colombia, draping himself in mud, and tweeted it to his 1.4 million followers. >> this wouldn't be the first time, though, that we see him in sort of an interesting getup. take a look at this. >> gee, when they told me a leather gift i was thinking more
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in terms of an attache case or a wallet. >> trust me, this is the latest in leather gear. >> really? why do you sound familiar? >> barry, of course. it's me. >> anderson! what are you doing here? >> i work for -- the whole reality show thing didn't work out for me. so i'm working here at the leather place. >> yes indeed. barry mitchell, the polka guy, ç and anderson in the leather shop apparently called the noose. i think that clip speaks foror itself. >> "world news now" people like you've never seen them before. we talked about charlie sheen's ex brooke mueller. she's had a lot of struggles with drugs and alcohol. she went to rehab then had a relapse. she was going to mexico to get this special drug ibogaine. apparently she couldn't get on the plane, though, when she went to go to the mexican rehab because she couldn't find her passport. so that is to be continued. they're trying to get her an emergency passport so she can get to that rehab. >> lots of rumors out there about katy perry and russell brand breaking up. apparently k ky went on to twitter and said, do not believe
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it, we're just fine, and the marriage apparently is solid. she went out there and wrote what you see there on your screen. privacy is our luxury, we don't need to flaunt our relationship. basically is what she said.
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here are some stories to watch today on abc news. the military psychiatrist charged in the 2009 ft. hood shootings is due in court this afternoon for arraignment. nidal malik hasan is accused of killing 13 people. american airlines is expected to announce it's ordering hundreds of new jets to replace those in its aging fleet. both boeing and airbus can expect orderer good news there. houston rockets all-star center yao ming just announced his retirement at a news conference in shanghai. he's struggled with inries during the past few years. that will be sad to see him go. he had quite a career. >> yeah, prominent player. > finally this half hour an update on once was and is now w again our what? our favorite story of the day. a story we told you about two week ago. we told you about a woman who was michael jordan's high school
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sweetheart. >> i love their prom picture. it's the beses she found her love letters from jordan online and they were up for auction at the time. as wtvd's alina machado reports, she's getting those letters back. >> i see my letter and i'm thinking, what in the world? >> reporter: that was laquetta robinson more than two weeks ago talking about the moment she realized someone had stolen this love letter michael jordan wrote to her when they dated in the '80s. the note and this prom picture landed on lelands.com and nabbed thousands in auction in 2004. robinson told us the items were stolen and sold without her permission. and her story went national. >> i guess i didn't see why it ç would draw the kind of attention it has drawn. >> reporter: we caught up with robinson after receiving this e-mail from nate d. sanders auctions. the l.a.-based auction house told us they recently purchased the stolen love letters and wanted to return them to their rightful owner. robinson also received this
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letter in the mail from the auction house asking her to send a police report so they could return the items. we called them with robinson, who was informed they apparently had not one but two of her letters. >> oh my god. >> reporter: confirming her fear that more items had been stolen than she initially thought. the auction house told robinson they paid a reputable and well-known company big bucks for the letters. >> she said in the thousands of dollars. she said "too much." >> reporter: while she's glad this auction house tracked her down and is promising to return the items robinson still wants to find out who took them from her. >> obviously whoever did it at the time didn't care about my feelings or what was personal to me, they were out to profit from it. >> that's so cool she got them back. that's so good. a piece of history there, man. >> it is stolen property, those love letters. also embarrassing. you know what you write when you're in high school, it's not exactly good journalism. >> shakespearean, no, it is not. for the record, michael jordan went to what college, dodoou
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